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            LARRY LEVIS
      Those Graves in Rome 
      
        (reprinted by permission of University of Pittsburgh
            Press) 
             There are places where the eye
        can starve, 
But not here. Here, for example, is 
The Piazza Navona, & here is the narrow room 
Overlooking the Steps & and crowds of sunbathing 
Tourists. And here is the Protestant Cemetery 
Where Keats & Joseph Severn join hands 
Forever under a little shawl of grass 
And where Keats' name isn't even on 
His gravestone, because it is on Severn's, 
And Joseph Severn's infant son is buried  
Two modest, grassy steps behind them both. 
But you'd have to know the story—how bedridden 
Keats wanted the inscription to be 
Simple & unbearable: "Here lies one 
Whose name is writ in water." On a warm day, 
I stood here with my two oldest friends. 
I thought, then, that the three of us would be 
Indissoluble at the end, & also that 
We would all die, of course. And not die. 
And maybe we should have joined hands at that 
Moment. We didn't. All we did was follow 
A lame man in a rumpled suit who climbed 
A slight incline of graves blurring into 
The passing marble of other graves to visit 
The vacant home of whatever is not left 
Of Shelley & Trelawney. That walk uphill must 
Be hard if you can't walk. At the top, the man 
Wheezed for breath; sweat beaded his face, 
And his wife wore a look of concern so 
Habitual it seemed more like the way 
Our bodies, someday, will have to wear stone. 
Later that night, the three of us strolled, 
Our arms around each other, through the Via 
Del Corso & toward the Piazza di Espagna 
As each street grew quieter until 
Finally we heard nothing at the end 
Except the occasional scrape of our own steps,  
And so said good-bye. Among such friends, 
Who never allowed anything, still alive, 
To die, I'd almost forgotten that what 
Most people leave behind them disappears. 
Three days later, staying alone in a cheap 
Hotel in Naples, I noticed a child's smeared 
Fingerprint on a bannister. It 
Had been indifferently preserved beneath 
A patina of varnish applied, I guessed, after 
The last war. It seemed I could almost hear 
His shout, years later, on that street. But this 
Is speculation, & no doubt the simplest fact 
Could shame me. Perhaps the child was from  
Calabria, & went back to it with 
A mother who failed to find work, & perhaps 
The child died there, twenty years ago, 
Of malaria. It was so common then— 
The children crying to the doctors for quinine, 
And to the tourists, who looked like doctors, for quinine. 
It was so common you did not expect an aria, 
And not much on a gravestone, either—although 
His name is on it, & weathered stone still wears 
His name—not the way a girl might wear 
The too large, faded blue workshirt of 
A lover as she walks thoughtfully through 
The Via Fratelli to buy bread, shrimp, 
And wine for the evening meal with candles &  
The laughter of her friends, & later the sweet 
Enkindling of desire; but something else, something 
Cut simply in stone by hand & meant to last 
Because of the way a name, any name, 
Is empty. And not empty. And almost enough.    
             
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